Back to All Articles

From Oracle EBS to Oracle Fusion: The Key Terminology Shifts Every Oracle Partner Should Know

From Oracle EBS to Oracle Fusion: The Key Terminology Shifts Every Oracle Partner Should Know

As Oracle continues to advance its cloud ecosystem, many organizations are transitioning from Oracle E-Business Suite (EBS) to Oracle Fusion Cloud Applications — a major step toward smarter, more connected enterprise operations.

At Altus, a certified Oracle Partner and Oracle Fusion implementation expert, we help businesses modernize their systems, streamline processes, and maximize ROI through Oracle Cloud ERP solutions.

This guide explores the key terminology and conceptual changes between Oracle EBS and Oracle Fusion, helping you understand how Fusion simplifies, unifies, and enhances enterprise management.

Multi-Org → Enterprise Structure

EBS Operating Units were linked to single legal entities. In Oracle Fusion, Business Units are more flexible, supporting operations across multiple entities and enabling shared service models.

With Fusion, enterprises can centralize key business processes while maintaining control over transactions, reporting, and compliance.

Operating Unit (OU) → Business Unit (BU)

EBS Operating Units were linked to single legal entities.

In Oracle Fusion, Business Units are more flexible, supporting operations across multiple entities and enabling shared service models.

With Fusion, enterprises can centralize key business processes while maintaining control over transactions, reporting, and compliance.

Responsibility → Role

EBS used “Responsibilities” for access control.

Fusion modernizes this through Role-Based Access Control (RBAC), managed via the Security Console. This provides centralized management, finer granularity, and stronger governance for enterprise-wide security.

Business Group → Enterprise

In EBS, Business Groups mainly secured HR data.

In Fusion, Enterprise serves as the top-level container holding all legal entities, business units, and organizational structures — promoting unified governance and consistent data management across modules.

System Administrator → Functional Setup Manager (FSM)

EBS required manual configuration by System Administrators.

Oracle Fusion’s Functional Setup Manager (FSM) automates and centralizes setup, offering a guided experience for faster deployment and standardized maintenance.

This shift minimizes configuration errors and simplifies Oracle Fusion ERP implementation for enterprises of all sizes.

Web ADI → ADFDI / FBDI

EBS users uploaded data via Web ADI.

Fusion replaces this with:

ADFDI (Application Development Framework Desktop Integration)

Used for interactive data entry and updates directly through spreadsheets.

FBDI (File-Based Data Import)

Designed for large-scale data uploads and migrations.

Both tools are optimized for Oracle Cloud ERP, ensuring seamless integration and efficient data management.

Forms (Java-Based) → Pages (Web-Based)

EBS relied on Java Forms for UI interaction.

Fusion delivers a modern, web-based interface with responsive pages, intuitive dashboards, and embedded analytics — improving usability, accessibility, and user productivity.

Key Flexfield → Flexfields (Key & Descriptive)

Fusion retains Flexfields but enhances them through unified data models and integration with the Functional Setup Manager.

This modernization makes Oracle Fusion ERP more adaptable to unique business requirements while maintaining global consistency.

Concurrent Program → Scheduled Processes

In EBS, background jobs were managed as Concurrent Programs.

Fusion upgrades this to Scheduled Processes, providing:

This empowers organizations to automate business workflows with greater efficiency.

Menu → Role & UI Structure

EBS menus defined navigation per responsibility.

Fusion redefines this with role-based UI structures, dynamically controlling user access to pages and functions.

This approach:

Why These Changes Matter

Migrating from Oracle EBS to Oracle Fusion is not just a technology upgrade — it is a strategic transformation toward automation, intelligence, and scalability.

Fusion introduces:

Altus helps organizations harness the full potential of Oracle Fusion ERP, ensuring smooth migration, minimal disruption, and long-term business value.

Business Benefits of Moving to Oracle Fusion

Organizations transitioning from Oracle EBS to Oracle Fusion gain:

Greater Agility

Cloud-native architecture supports faster adaptation to business changes.

Improved Governance

Role-based security and centralized configuration strengthen control and compliance.

Better User Experience

Modern interfaces improve adoption and productivity across departments.

Enhanced Analytics

Embedded reporting and real-time dashboards support faster decision-making.

Scalability

Organizations can grow without the infrastructure limitations associated with traditional on-premises systems.

How Altus Supports EBS to Fusion Migrations

As a certified Oracle Partner, Altus helps organizations navigate every stage of their Oracle transformation journey.

Our goal is to ensure organizations maximize the value of their Oracle investment while minimizing operational disruption.

Conclusion

At Altus, we bring proven expertise in Oracle Fusion Cloud ERP implementation, EBS to Fusion migration, and Oracle Cloud consulting.

As a certified Oracle Partner, we empower enterprises to modernize their systems, streamline operations, and drive digital transformation through Oracle’s next-generation cloud technology.

If your organization is planning to transition from Oracle EBS to Oracle Fusion, partner with Altus — your trusted Oracle Implementation Partner committed to innovation, precision, and performance.

Contact Altus for Oracle Fusion Consulting.

Related Articles

ERP

How Recurring Invoices in Oracle Fusion Payables Transform AP Efficiency

May 8, 2026 · 5 min
ERP

Oracle Database@Azure: What Every Enterprise Leader Needs to Know Before Moving

May 2, 2026 · 6 min
ERP Guide

The Ultimate Guide to Oracle ERP & WMS Implementation

Apr 8, 2026 · 4 min